Concentrated judicial review in Brazil and Colombia: which (or whose) rights are protected?

Over the last few decades, judicial power has expanded, especially in constitutional or supreme courts. Recently, scholars in comparative constitutional law have focused their attention on analyzing the causes and consequences of this expansion in different constitutional systems. There are still no...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marcus Flávio Horta Caldeira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal do Paraná 2020-10-01
Series:Revista de Investigações Constitucionais
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.ufpr.br/rinc/article/view/69583
id doaj-74b11a5669ae468da3bc90120fc06325
record_format Article
spelling doaj-74b11a5669ae468da3bc90120fc063252020-11-25T04:02:59ZengUniversidade Federal do ParanáRevista de Investigações Constitucionais2359-56392020-10-017116118710.5380/rinc.v7i1.6958334342Concentrated judicial review in Brazil and Colombia: which (or whose) rights are protected?Marcus Flávio Horta Caldeira0Universidade de BrasíliaOver the last few decades, judicial power has expanded, especially in constitutional or supreme courts. Recently, scholars in comparative constitutional law have focused their attention on analyzing the causes and consequences of this expansion in different constitutional systems. There are still no studies that compare the role played by constitutional or supreme courts in the defense of individual and social rights, specifically with regard to the link between the protection of rights and the extent to which social actors are granted standing to assert constitutional claims. This paper intends to provide some thoughts on this issue. The text will analyze the relationship between the protection of rights and the extent to which plaintiffs are granted the right to file constitutional claims in Colombia and Brazil. We conclude that the comparison between Brazil and Colombia presents relevant insights into how the dimension of authority, specifically standing to access the main courts in each system, can make a large difference in the protection of social and individual rights.https://revistas.ufpr.br/rinc/article/view/69583protection of individual and social rightscolombian constitutional courtbrazilian federal supreme courtcriteria of autonomy and authoritycriteria for standing to access the courts.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marcus Flávio Horta Caldeira
spellingShingle Marcus Flávio Horta Caldeira
Concentrated judicial review in Brazil and Colombia: which (or whose) rights are protected?
Revista de Investigações Constitucionais
protection of individual and social rights
colombian constitutional court
brazilian federal supreme court
criteria of autonomy and authority
criteria for standing to access the courts.
author_facet Marcus Flávio Horta Caldeira
author_sort Marcus Flávio Horta Caldeira
title Concentrated judicial review in Brazil and Colombia: which (or whose) rights are protected?
title_short Concentrated judicial review in Brazil and Colombia: which (or whose) rights are protected?
title_full Concentrated judicial review in Brazil and Colombia: which (or whose) rights are protected?
title_fullStr Concentrated judicial review in Brazil and Colombia: which (or whose) rights are protected?
title_full_unstemmed Concentrated judicial review in Brazil and Colombia: which (or whose) rights are protected?
title_sort concentrated judicial review in brazil and colombia: which (or whose) rights are protected?
publisher Universidade Federal do Paraná
series Revista de Investigações Constitucionais
issn 2359-5639
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Over the last few decades, judicial power has expanded, especially in constitutional or supreme courts. Recently, scholars in comparative constitutional law have focused their attention on analyzing the causes and consequences of this expansion in different constitutional systems. There are still no studies that compare the role played by constitutional or supreme courts in the defense of individual and social rights, specifically with regard to the link between the protection of rights and the extent to which social actors are granted standing to assert constitutional claims. This paper intends to provide some thoughts on this issue. The text will analyze the relationship between the protection of rights and the extent to which plaintiffs are granted the right to file constitutional claims in Colombia and Brazil. We conclude that the comparison between Brazil and Colombia presents relevant insights into how the dimension of authority, specifically standing to access the main courts in each system, can make a large difference in the protection of social and individual rights.
topic protection of individual and social rights
colombian constitutional court
brazilian federal supreme court
criteria of autonomy and authority
criteria for standing to access the courts.
url https://revistas.ufpr.br/rinc/article/view/69583
work_keys_str_mv AT marcusflaviohortacaldeira concentratedjudicialreviewinbrazilandcolombiawhichorwhoserightsareprotected
_version_ 1724441428424130560